Pastan Essays

  • Anger by Linda Pastan

    633 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Oxford English Dictionary defines the word anger, a noun physical affliction or pain; inflammatory state of any part of the body. Then defines anger, a verb to distress, trouble, vex, hurt, wound. In Linda Pastan’s poem “Anger” the word anger takes the action of a noun. The word anger stands out for two reasons, the author chooses it for the title, and the only sentence with anger gives the poem meaning. In the beginning of the poem the word “it” gets used many times and we don’t know what “it”

  • Essay on Character, Symbolism, and Language in Linda Pastan's Ethics

    940 Words  | 2 Pages

    that the most difficult choices to make are also the most important.  Through Pastan's use of character, symbolism, and descriptive language, the theme of this poem is presented for thought.  While choices are made every day without much thought, Pastan has made clear that choices made without the benefit of wisdom are almost always regretted. The portrayal of the speaker is one way the author has reinforced her theme.  The speaker is young and in school (1).  An instructor asks the class

  • Linda Pastan Metaphors

    521 Words  | 2 Pages

    Marks By: Linda Pastan. Pastan uses one metaphoric theme throughout this poem to get her point across. The way that Pastan sets up the main point is by framing how a mom or wife is looked at by their children, she represents this by receiving letter grades from her husband and children as representation in how she is not good enough or appreciated for what she is doing for her family. The mother represented in the poem is not actually being given letter grades, this however allows Pastan to connect emotionally

  • Linda Pastan Women

    962 Words  | 2 Pages

    Piercy, “Marks” by Linda Pastan, and “Suicide Note” by

  • Ethics by Linda Pastan

    605 Words  | 2 Pages

    The message Linda Pastan portrays in the poem Ethics is the idea that one can only fully grasp ethics and morals once they mature and have developed experiences in their life. Ethics and morals can only be present once one has gained experienced and developed maturity. The author uses imagery, diction and figures of speech to prove this point. In this poem, a teacher asks her students, if there was a fire and they only had the choice to save a Rembrandt painting or an old woman, which would they

  • Linda Pastan's Poem Ethics

    784 Words  | 2 Pages

    Linda Pastan's poem "Ethics" In Linda Pastan's poem "Ethics," the speaker recounts a moral dilemma that her teacher would ask every fall, which has been haunting her for a long time.  The question was "if there were a fire in a museum / which would you save, a Rembrandt painting / or an old woman who hadn't many / years left anyhow?" and the speaker tells us through the theme that ethics and moral values can be only learned from the reflection which comes through experience and maturity.  In this

  • Analysis Of Ethics By Linda Pastan

    765 Words  | 2 Pages

    Ethics and Human Life A political (feminist) criticism of “Ethics” becomes a commentary on how our society views the elderly, especially elderly women. The author, Linda Pastan, is the narrator of the poem and presents herself recalling an ethics class taken when she was young. An ethical delimina is presented by a teacher. The students are asked , ”if there were a fire in a museum/ which would you save, a Rembrandt painting/ or an old woman who hadn’t many/years left anyhow?” (lines 3-5). The

  • Analysis Of Ethics By Linda Pastan

    598 Words  | 2 Pages

    In "Ethics," a poem by Linda Pastan, the speaker talks about a moral question that her Ethics teacher would ask every fall, which has remained in her thoughts for a long time. The question was "if there were a fire in a museum / which would you save, a Rembrandt painting / or an old woman who hadn't many / years left anyhow?" (3-6). and the speaker tells us that ethics and moral values can only be learned from the reflection which comes through experience and maturity. The speaker uses some literary

  • Linda Pastan Judgement

    590 Words  | 2 Pages

    No one likes to be judged, whether the judgement is good or bad. People in general are already critical of themselves to have the time to be critical of others, but, people seem to have found toe time to do it. In Linda Pastan’s “Marks’, the mother receives judgement in the form of grades from her family members. The last two lines of the poems could be read one of two ways, of that of indignance or melancholy. One outcome that people would expect is for her to kill herself, but as the reader, my

  • An Analysis Of 'Marks' By Linda Pastan

    1155 Words  | 3 Pages

    The poem I chose to write about is “Marks” by Linda Pastan. In this poem, she appears to be married with two kids and it was written about her experience in her everyday life as a woman. The poem “Marks” is found on page 807 in our text. This poem was very relatable to my life as an everyday woman. The poem expressed how Linda, just like myself, a married woman with two kids, deal with the constant grading of our daily routine as a woman just as if we are still a student in school. The poem

  • Comparison Of Poems 'Marks And Baseball' By Linda Pastan

    1857 Words  | 4 Pages

    some do not experience it as Linda Pastan did during the women’s movement. She expresses her feeling of “life” in her poem “Marks” and “Baseball. Both of these poems portray the use of extended metaphors to set the theme of her poems and are similar in comparing two distinct things to life, but in different ways. Linda Pastan was a great poet while also a wife and mother. She “suspended her writing for a decade while raising her three children” (Potvin 2). Pastan stated in an interview with Jeffery

  • The Use of Tone and Metaphors in Marks by Linda Pastan

    595 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Use of Tone and Metaphors in Marks by Linda Pastan Linda Pastan?s poem ?Marks? is unusual because it addresses the frustrations of a typical housewife. Few people consider being a wife and mother a full-time job in itself, and it is not uncommon for a woman who plays both of these roles to feel overworked and unappreciated. What is unusual about Pastan?s poem is the way she effectively conveys these sentiments by the use of metaphors, tone, and informal diction. The speaker?s attitude

  • Instrumentality, Denial Of Subjectivity And Ownership By Linda Pastan

    1017 Words  | 3 Pages

    This is an ongoing issue, as women across the globe are being objectified. This is also true in family life. Men treat women as if they were something that they have a right to own and use, which is toxic for both sides of the relationship. Linda Pastan, in her poem Marks, finds that instrumentality, denial of subjectivity, and ownership cause the narrator to rethink and reject her

  • Analysis Of To A Daughter Leaving Home By Linda Pastan

    1095 Words  | 3 Pages

    special bond between parents and children, but there is always uncertainty, whether it’s with the parents having to let go or the children, now adults, reminiscing on the times they had with their parents. The poem “To a Daughter Leaving Home” by Linda Pastan is a very emotional poem about what you can assume: a daughter leaving home. Then the poem “Alzheimer 's" by Kelly Cherry is about the poet’s father, a former professional musician who develops the disease. These are only two examples that show the

  • Why Are Your Poem's So Dark? By Linda Pastan

    725 Words  | 2 Pages

    "Why Are Your Poem 's So Dark?" written by Linda Pastan, answers the question of why poet 's always seem to write about the darkness of the world. Pastan 's purpose is to stand up for the poets who are criticized for writing dark poems. She wants to let people know that poets write about the reality of the world, with all the injustices that taken place in the world. The world is a dark place, so choose poets write about what they see in the world. In the first two lines of the poem the speaker

  • Analysis Of The Five Stages Of Grief By Linda Pastan

    531 Words  | 2 Pages

    The “The five stages of grief” by Linda Pastan and the imageries related to the poem provokes an idea that if an individual just follow what others say without attempting to make a change, they are unlikely to look forward and move on. The protagonist fails to step out of her melancholic nostalgia past, while others think it’s as easy as “learning to climb/ Stairs after amputation”. Relearning to climb after amputation suggests that what was previously known is either forgotten or unuseful similar

  • Linda Pastan's View Of Traditional Gender Roles By Linda Pastan

    761 Words  | 2 Pages

    is an distinct line that separates the two genders in society. Linda Pastan, a feminist critic, writes a short poem that focuses on a wife’s duties being graded by her family as if they were her homework assignment. In her poem Marks, Linda Pastan utilizes the reduction to body, denial of autonomy, and the act of ownership to temporarily re-evaluate her position within her family.     By examining traditional gender roles, Pastan writes her short poem in the view of a mother figure. The mother describes

  • Summary Of The Five Stages Of Grief By Linda Pastan

    578 Words  | 2 Pages

    Grief is most commonly perceived as a driving force that pushes individuals into a melancholic state. Linda Pastan’s poem The Five Stages of Grief depicts the effects of prolonging grief through the eyes of an individual who has recently experienced a personal loss. Throughout the story, the speaker struggles to accept the loss of a loved one, setting the overall atmosphere of the story to one that helps readers visualize the pain and suffering the speaker goes through. The Five Stages of Grief

  • Why Are Your Poem So Dark Analysis

    725 Words  | 2 Pages

    Why Are Your Poem 's So Dark?" written by Linda Pastan, answers the question of why poet 's always seem to write about the darkness of the world. Pastan 's purpose is to stand up for the poets who are criticized for writing dark poems. She wants to let people know that poets write about the reality of the world, with all the injustices that taken place in the world. The world is a dark place, so choose poets write about what they see in the world. In the first two lines of the poem the speaker established

  • Linda Pastan's For a Daughter Leaving Home

    868 Words  | 2 Pages

    difficult and stressful journey that the girl has embarked on throughout her life. Although the girl is now grown up and ready to start a life of her own, her parent is recalling everything about the girl’s life up to this point. The author, Linda Pastan, was born on in1932, on May 27 in New York City, New York. She was the only child of Jacob L. Olenic, a surgeon, and Bess Olneic. She had a relatively normal life growing up. Her parents were from European Jewish descent, but because of their atheistic